Department for Energy and Climate Change

Office for Nuclear Regulation: Annual Report to Parliament

Lord Bourne of Aberystwyth: My Hon Friend the Minister of State for Energy and Climate Change (Andrea Leadsom) has today made the following statement.   My Rt Hon Friend the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change will today lay before Parliament an Annual Report to Parliament by the Secretary of State. The report sets out the use of the Secretary of State’s powers under Part 3 of the Energy Act 2013, which created the Office for Nuclear Regulation.   Both my Rt Hon Friend the Secretary of State for Department for Work and Pensions and the Office for Nuclear Regulation have been consulted. The report discloses which powers have been used under Section 108 of the Energy Act 2013 during the last financial year (2014-2015). For completeness the report also refers to the exercise of powers in the first short reporting period of ONR from 10 March 2014 to 31 March 2014.

Department for Work and Pensions

Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) Annual Report and Accounts 2014-15

Baroness Altmann: My honourable Friend The Minister for Disabled People (Justin Tomlinson) has made the following Written Statement. Later today the Office for Nuclear Regulation’s Annual Report and Accounts for 2014-2015 (HC 164) will be published. Having consulted the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change who is accountable for nuclear security and the Office for Nuclear Regulation, I can confirm, in accordance with Schedule 7, Section 25(3) of the Energy Act 2013, that there have been no exclusions to the published document on the grounds of national security.


This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS63

Foreign and Commonwealth Office

800th Anniversary of Magna Carta: Global Tour

Baroness Anelay of St Johns: My right Honourable Friend, Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (Hugo Swire), has made the following written Ministerial statement: It is normal practice, when a government department proposes to undertake a contingent liability in excess of £300,000 for which there is no specific statutory authority, for the Minister concerned to present a Departmental Minute to Parliament giving particulars of the liability created and explaining the circumstances; and to refrain from incurring the liability until fourteen parliamentary sitting days after the issue of the Minute, except in cases of special urgency. I have today laid a departmental Minute proposing to provide an indemnity of £24,000,000 in respect of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office-approved global tour of the Magna Carta and King’s Writ celebrating the 800th anniversary. This indemnity will last from 1 September until 31 December 2015 and will cover loss or damage of the documents in this period. The 800th anniversary of the sealing of Magna Carta provides a unique opportunity to support our diplomatic and economic objectives. This global tour supports the UK’s position as a mature democracy built upon the values it promotes globally, and our established position as a centre of finance, commerce and law. We have secured the agreement of the Dean and Chapter of Hereford Cathedral to use their 1217 Magna Carta and only surviving King’s Writ from Runnymede 1215 for this tour. If the liability is called, provision for any payment will be sought through the normal supply procedure. The Treasury has approved the proposal in principle. If, during the period of fourteen parliamentary sitting days beginning on the date on which this Minute was laid before Parliament, a Member signifies an objection by giving notice of a Parliamentary Question or by otherwise raising the matter in Parliament, final approval to proceed with incurring the liability will be withheld pending an examination of the objection.




This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS66